
“I’m Not Alone,” Says Poilievre, Standing In Increasingly Spacious Caucus Room
In what aides are privately calling a “rapidly evolving social situation,” Pierre Poilievre insists he is not losing allies, just “conducting an aggressive audit of who was never really there for him.”
The declaration follows a series of byelection defeats so thorough they handed Mark Carney a majority and Poilievre something closer to a group chat where no one replies. Once-loyal ridings have begun “seeing other parties,” including Toronto, where Conservatives slipped to third place, and Terrebonne, where support fell to 3.3 per cent, roughly the political equivalent of being left on read by an entire province.
Speaking in the House of Commons, Poilievre vowed to keep fighting, though observers note the battle increasingly resembles a man insisting the party isn’t over as guests quietly collect their coats.
Insiders confirm the new Conservative platform centers on loyalty, perseverance, and pretending the room isn’t getting emptier.
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